t LIST OF FREEL'AND MERCHANTS I p "WHO GIVE : Staniarfl Matt (Ms Willi Cash Parchases. ; PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. < FXPI A NATION f' le merchants whose names appear in this Directory are the lead - A j n g business people in this vicinity; they want your cash trade, and R in order to secure it they are going to give STANDARD REBATE CHECKS. One check for r every ten-cent purchase or ten with every dollar, etc. When you have saved the required number of QTANDARn RFRATE flHFfliCv from i, any or all of these merchants combined, YOU exchange 01H ' ,|L ' rtnL ' NhDrtlh bn£iUl\o them „ at our stores WHICH ARE PERMANENTLY LOCATED IN 'THE BETIILEHEMS," or f at any of our Branches, for useful and attractive articles to decorate your home. Rebate Checks bring cash trade and cash trade is always worth 5 per cent. The merchant makes f 110 advance on his goods, but on the contrary, can and does sell cheaper. The merchant may y not always think to give you Rebate Checks. For that reason, you must ask for them; they ►> belong to you for cash trade; you are not begging for them, and it pleases the merchants to ~ get your cash trade. The Standard Rebate Check puts business on it cash basis, enables the . ( merchant to pay his debts, purchase his goods cheaper, and does not figure in his losses a lot r of dead hook accounts. Are you not entitled to a discount if you pay cash? Pay cash and ask for Standard Rebate Checks. They belong to you. Standard Rebate Check Company's Stores, i 30 East Third Street, South Bethlehem, Pa. r > 45 South Main Street, Bethlehem, Home Office. I 132 South Main Street, Bethlehem, Pa. t Storehouse, Over Public Market, Bethlehem, Pa. y LIST OF PREMIUMS. Checks Required. Furniture ( Hooking Chairs 400-500- 000-700-800-lUOU-1200-1500 f Morris (.'hairs 1300-1500 k Writing Desks 1000-1500 \ Japanese Screens 700-1000 ►) 1500-2000 ( Birds' Eye Maple, Golden ►> Oak, Mahogany and Mar- I uuctrie Tubles 500-600- fy SOO-1000-1300 ( Tabarets 500-800- i 1000 [ Hall Hacks 1500-DOO t> 2000 : Hampers 500-700- ►> 1000 ; Hugs 500-soo >> 000-1000 ( Pictures 300-400- ►> 500-000-800-1000 Iy Musical Instruments I Hanjos 1000 ( Violins 500 Guitars 800 Autoharps 800 k Mandolins 500 Aeeordeous 400-500 Silverware 7 Knives 300 V Forks 300 7 Spoons 300 fruit Dishes V 800-1000 c. Cracker Jure 500-000 V lee Pitchers 800-1000- LV 1300 " Cake Dishes 500-600- l 800 ( Castors - 500-000- 800 " Clocks 500-000- 800-1000-1300-1400-1500 ' Watches 500-1000 \ 1500-3000 a- A—> ia -b Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. S^S%!j SBFLOTHERHOOO HATS Q u A celebrated brand of XX Hour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. AMANDUS OSWALD, N. W. Cor. Centre and Front tits., Freeland. DePIERRO - BROS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre and Front Streets, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock. Gibson, Dougherty, Kaufer Club, Koeenbluth's Velvet, of which we hive EXCLUSIVE SALE 111 TOWN. Mumra's Extra Dry Champagne, Hennessy Urandy, Blackberry, Gins, Wines; Clarets, Cordials, Etc. Imported and Domestic Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. 11dm and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines, Etc. MEALS - AT - ALL - HOURS. tiallentlne and Hazleton beer on tap. Baths, lint or Cold, 25 Cents. | TRUSSES. 6SC, $1.25 AND IIP ; York Hr*rll.lr Elutlc Trus*. illustrated above, Ut this ad. out and Hind to UH with OIK BPK< UL FHH'K named, J Htutc your HHtcht, *| K iit, Ape, bow long you have lieen | ruptured, whether rupture Is lni jre or small, UIHO state number inches around the body on a line with ttie rupture, ay whether rupture 1b on right or left side, and we will fiend either truss to you with the under standing. If It I* not a pfrfnl Hi anil equal to Ironae* thai retail at three tlnien our prlee.v MI. I . tun, it and we will return your money. WRITE FOR FREE TRUSS CATALOGUE xzssssLtsz'n. TWR...SEARS, ROEBUCK & Co. CHICAGO Glassware Vases 300-400- 500-600-800- KKN) I Water Sets 500-tMHj Tea Sets, 4 pieces 500-000- 600 Hose Howls 300 per I Lemonade Sets 50(1-000 Cliinaware and Crockery Lamps 300-400- 50t •-•HH)-HOO-1000- 1200-1500-1 OOt (-3000 ) J ardiueres 300-400- 500 Tea Sets, 50 pieces 1000-1500 Toilet Sets, 10 pieces ... 1000-1300-1500 Dinner Sets, 113 pieces 3000-3500 Umbrella Stands >OO-1000- 1200-3000 Vases, per pair 3t*Mou -500-600-800-1000 Chocolate Pots 400-500- 600-800-1000 I Clocks 500-000- fi( Kl-100( •-121JO-144M i-15( HJ-20c;i I I Jardineres, with Pedestals. 500-800- 1000-1300 Cabarets 500-600 Cracker Jars 300-400- ;500-600 Sund lies Bronze Ornaments 300-500- uuo-soo-iuuo Jewelry Cabinets 400-500- Re vol vers 1000-1500- 2000 I Cameras 600-1000- 1500-3000 Japanese Art Goods 300-400- 500-600-800-KXK!-ete. ! Hanging Lamps 000-1000- 1300-1400 | AndTother Beautiful and Useful J A rtlcles. T. CAMPBELL, dealer in Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes. Also PURE WINES ii LIQUORS foil FA MI I.T j AND MEDICINAL PURPOSES. • Centre mid Mnln streets. Freeland. P. F. McNULTY, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER. ! Embalming of femule corpses performed j exclusively by Mrs. P. F. McNulty. j Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. | South Centre street, Freeland. Promptly Done t ttie Tribune Office. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. ÜBO In time. Bold by druggists. M ißEZ2H!ziaaiHa^i! MERCHANTS OF FREELAND. A. OSWALT), Dry Good, Notions, Groceries, Wood and Willow-ware, Oilcloth, Hats, Caps, Shoes, Flour, Feed, etc. REFOWICH'S "Wear Well Clothing 1101180," Centre Street. REFOWICH'S "Wear Well Hoot and Shoe House," 53 Centre Street. E. .1. CURRY, Choice Groceries, Hotter, Eggs, etc. S. WEXXER it SONS, General Merchandise, Shoes, Rubbers, etc. Agents for the "White Star" Flour. WM. KEIPER, Confectionery, Tobacco, Cigars, etc. JOSEPH HIRKHECK, "Sunshine" Stoves, Ranges and Furnaces, Hardware, Paints, Oils and Glass. Toys of all description. "HLACIv DIAMOND" Cash Store, J. C. Hernor, Manager. GEO. 11. IIARTMAN, Meats, Green Groceries. Fish in season. JoHN RIPPEL, Raker and Confectioner. GEORGE KROMMES, Groceries and Provisions. WM. WILLIAMSON, Stoves, Tinware, Hardware and House Furnishing Goods. No Checks Given With Sugar. f^eCurethS^ures^ (p Coughs, <s\ \ Colds, J ® Grippe, (k \ Whooping Cough, Asthma, 1 4) Bronchitis and Incipient A Consumption, Is foTjos] $Tm German remedy" tk IT Cures WwoA AH4 Yutvq AXseaeca. j 25fi\50tw4 GEORGE FISHER, dealer in Liquors, Wines, Cigars, Etc. FOB A GLASS OF FRESH BEER, PORTER OR ALE call at NO. a EAHT WALNUT STREET. Condy 0. Boyle, denier in Liquor, Wine, Beer, Porter, Etc. 1 The finest brands of Domestic and Imported i Whiskey on sale in one of the handsomest sa- ! loons in town. Fresh Rochester and She IIUII- ' ; doah Beer and youngling's Porter 011 tap. I Centre street, j Black Diamonds. The only place where "black dia* monds" are found is in the Brazilian Province of Buhia. They are usually found in river beds and brought up by divers. Others are obtained by tunneling mountains. The largest specimen ever found was worth $20,- 000. How to Tell a Lady—in Boston. Hick? —No gentleman will swear in the presence of a lady. * Wicks—No; but If a lady happens to make her appearance when a man is in the midst of a swearing fit, she is no lady if she expects him to leave i off at once. —Boston Transcript. THE RIVER ROUSTABOUT. He Is Still Doing Business at the Old Stand. One who makes a trip up the river and watches the antics of the negroes and listens to their wlerd songs and tales will not agree with the Iconoc last who says that all the beauties and the picturesque features have faded out of the steamboat man's life. As a line of negroes goes up the hill un der the glare of the searchlight with their peculiar swinging tread and sing the music, which seems somehow to be a essential part, of the action, the light is one which has a strange wild ness about it and a fascination, too. The negro Is not the same as he was before the war. Conditions have changed too much for that. But he has retained his love for the fantastic and most of those barbaric customs which civilization seems unable to eradicate from the African mind. The first mate has undergone a marked ftetainorphoris, and to his change is due some portion of the new features in the deckhand'B character. Time was when the first mate had a vocabulary which would make an or dinary sailor's parrot die for shame. He had this vocabulary, and the ne groes held the same opinion as the one who answered when asked if he did not object to the mate's abuse, "No, boss, dat's whut he's paid for. He's got to make out he's doin' some thin', an' it don't do us no harm." Now the deckhands actually "object to be ing sworn at when the oaths become too vigorous. The pay of the deck hand is usually S6O a month, even when the business Is only moderately heavy, and last winter, daring the big rush, a crew of negroes refused to ship because the wages did not suit them. They were ofTered S9O per month, but wanted SIOO for the trip. The first peculiarity which strikes the observer about the deckhand is his walk. He has climbed up the ' steep river embankment when there was mud all over it. and he has coma down that same slide with a heavy weight upon his hack. He has adopt ed a step which prevents him from slipping, and this gives him a pecu- J liar shufillng step unlike any move- \ ment seen elsewhere. He combines J with this a hoisting of the shoulders i and a peculiar turn of the head acquir- j ed from turning his face to let a sack rest upon his shoulder. These three traits are distinctive and give the M.k'iund a strange appearance upon the levee, or anywhere off a boat or away from the river. As he works going up the inclines or along the gangplank, precariously resting upon a levee's crest, he has a rhythmic sort of chant which fits in with his music. Always the same j class of songs are sung. Usually I there are no words, but some leader) chants and the others voice the chorus as they bond to their tasks. There j are sack songs and barrel songs and music for the cotton bale and the i ordinary package. The music varies 1 with the task, as the movement of the negro's body varies. The cotton song. : as the hale is lifted forward and al lowed to drop, hae a catchy swing to It. Down go tlio sharp hooks and the • hale starts up to fall with a quick thud. So does the music. The other airs, like all negro music, are har monies, not melodies, which are timed to the labor. The crap game can be seen in its full glory only when the deckhand plays it upon the boat's deck. From the foot of President's Island to the ; city no stops are made, and a like con dition prevails in regard to boats from the upper river. This is called i the crap limit. The negroes are paid off before they reach the city, and usually at the last stop before the city. As soon as the pay is received the negroes gather and begin to shoot craps, and the cries for "Big Dick" and "Little Joe" and "Ada" are heard until the boat has landed. When it does some few negroes generally pos sess the money paid to all. —Memphis Scinitar. Canada's Fuel Problem. "The most serious problem that con fronts the Canadian people of the fu ture," says Colonel Seyfert in a letter to the State Department from Stiat ford, "is material for fuel. The gigan tic lumber industry and the great an nual forest fires have so denuded the timber area of Ontario that the people are thoroughly alarmed about the fu ture fuel supply. Hard wood for fuel is now worth from $G to $8 a cord and soft from $3 to $3, while, coal, which is all imported from the United States, costs $G a ton. The item of fuel is, therefore one of the heaviest expenses to every person in this latitude of long and severe winters. An ordinary resi dent will consume no less than SIOO worth of fuel a year. It has been well known for years that there are exten sive beds of peat bog in Canada, and particularly in the providence of On tario. An effort has been made during the last six months to utilize this product of nature. In Holland, Ireland, Wales and Bavaria peat has long been i the chief fuel used by the people. The i recent invention of machinery by ! means of which vast areas of hitherto i unused bogs can be converted into ' marketable peat has opened up a new | Canadian industry." Alcoholism and Crime. J The alcoholic craving accounts for many a confirmed criminal. Doubtless the tendency exists in a minor degree as belonging to all habituals, who make it a secondary part of their life, teetotalers being rarely met with in criminal walks. But there is a large number of hopeless prisoners whose only idea of life is drunkenness at ' any cost. In such the craving makes the criminal, and as the drink cannot ; be obtained without money other means are resorted to, such as break ing into public houses, robbing bar tills, stealing jugs and bottles from children sent out on such errands, dressing up aa blind men, mutilated beggars crawling along the pavement and other pleasantries so well known to the expert. Chewing a piece of soap and thus forming a lather to the sim ulation of epilepsy is a common fraud, and the profits all go to the publican. The alcoholic aspect is, however, very difficult of concealment, and the ex perienced observer well knows the pseudo-epileptic, the armless, legless cripple, and the unfortunate widow | who with five children (all hired) par- I ades the street in lamentation of woes.—Gentleman's Magazine. FINED FOR WINNING. Young Lawyer Wat Ignorant of The Ethloo of Horae Stealing. 'When I graduated from the law acbool," said the old lawyer, with a reminiscent smile, "I took Horace Greeley's advice and went West. I located in a little town that then waa on the frontier, and waited with the confidence of youth for clients. Be fore I had fairly opened my office I was retained to defend a man for stealing a horse. This elated me very much, for I was not aware at the time that the case had been refused by all the other lawyers In town, as defend ing a horse thief was not a thing to be desired if a man valued his life. The case came for trial before an old Judge and a Jury composed of be wblskered ranchers. There was no doubt that the man was guilty, but he had a number of friends who were willing to swear to anything, and I thought It my duty to make the beat possible use of them. They were all willing to swear that the defendant was forty miles away from the spot when the horse was stolen, and the prosecution was unable to break down their testimony. I saw that 1 was go ing to free my client, so It was with a satisfied air that I saw the jury leav ing the room to prepare the verdict. They were back In five minutes, and the old Judge asked them If they had succeeded In arriving at a verdict. " 'We hev,' answered the foreman, as he shifted the gun he carried on his hip. 'We find the defendant not guilty, an' recommend the defendant's lawyer, owln' to his youth and Inno cence, to the mercy of the Court.' "While I was gasping for breath the Judge fined me SSOO and suspended sentence long enough for me to get out of town. It wasn't law, but I did not stop to argue the matter. —Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Reminded of It, I—The1 —The Beggar (weeping bitterly)— "Sir. I have a wife at home —" 2—Jones (bursting into tears)— "So-s-so have I."—N. Y. Journal. Thought He Was at Home. "I want a marriage license." he said to the clerk brazenly. Ills name and her name and both their ages wis asked. He gave them to the clerk in a loud, winter-weather ed voice and looked around the room to see how much attention he had at tracted. "How much?" he asked. The price of the bit of paper was given to him. He took It In his hand. He looked It over. Then he asked. "Where's the coupon?" "What coupon?" queried the clerk, wonderingly. "The divorce coupon," answered the man. The clerk gasped. "The idea!" he exclaimed. "Who ever heard of such a thing?" Say, Mister, where are you from?" "Dakota!" And the wind whistled outside.—Detroit Free Press. Her Explanation. I drove over the park bridge yester day afternoon in one of those carry all 'buses, tucked away in a bapk seat us neatly us a match In a box. On the front, beside the driver, sat three little brown-eyed girls. Their mother was squeezed In behind, by me. As we ap proached the Detroit shore a sail boat decided to go on up stream, and the gate was thrown across the bridge, as the draw was swung. The little girl on the end of the front seat looked at the great mass of steel and wood as it slipped by. open mouthed; then, turning back, she said to her mother, with tears just coming Into her eyes: "Oh, mamrni, see, the bridge is all broke and we'll have to stay here for ever."—Detroit Free Press. Cruel Sarcasm. "I know the pumpkin pie was rather thin as to filling," said the landlady, almost crying, "but 1 don't think lie had any right to say what he did." "What did he say?" asked the sec ond table boarder. "He asked me if I didn't think that the pie crust would be improved If it had another coat of yellow paint."— What-to-Eat. The Way Out of It. "They say that Nell Gadleigh has broken her engagement with Harry Hippleton." "Yes, she says that he was so affec tionate that he wearied her." "Oh! if that was all, why didn't she just marry him and have done with the wearisome part?"— Boston Trav eler. Not the One That Waa Out. "Is the cashier out?" he asked as he looked around. "No," replied the president, as he glanced up from an examination of the books, "the cathler Is not out; ft's the bank that, la out."—Exchange. Beyond Hie Reach. "Truth," he quoted. Is at the bottom of a well." ' "And you are no kind of a diver," waa the prompt re l -rt.—Chicago Ppjt, NEVER DRINK WATER. Horses and Cattle That Blake Their Thiret on a Peculiar Orate. The proverbial horse which can be led to water, but which cannot be made to drink, exists In great num bers In the Hawaiian islands. Among the cattle he has thousands of coueins of the same proclivities. It Is a surprising statement to make, and yet one that is literally true, and bo commonplace that no one there thinks anything about It, that there are hundreds of horses and thousands of cattle which never take a drink of water throughout the whole course of their lives. On all the Islands the upper alti tudes of the mountains are given up to cattle ranges. The cattle run wild from the time they are born mi/ til they are rounded up to be sent to the slaughterhouse. Eycept during pc ilbly two or three months of the rainy season, there are no streams or pools of water in any part where the cattle range. But everywhere there grows a re cumbent, jointed grass, known by the native name of manlnla. This Is both food and drink. Horses and cattle grazing on It neither require water, nor will they drink 18- when offered. Our first experience with this fact was on a trip to Haleakala. A party was mounted on horses which has just been brought in from the range. The Journey they made was fourteen miles, in which distance tney ascended about 8,000 feet. The party started In the afternoon, and about sunset halted for supper. They thought it strange that the horses should leave a feed of grain to nibble the scanty grass which grew near by, but were willing to trust their Instinct in the matter. However, before starting, they In sisted that they be given water. The native guide demurred in this, saying they didn't need it. but with the good natured complaisance of his race, yielded to requests, and led a detour of about a mile, which brought the party to a ranch house where there was a well. But, to the utter amaze ment and stupefaction of the traveler!, the horses would not drink. They took it as another case of In stinct, and assumed that the water, for some reason, was not good, and so refrained from drinking It themselves. It was not until the return the second day, to Kawaapae. that the travelers learned the secret of the wonderful manlnia grass.—Cincinnati Enquirer. What Sailors Have Survived. The recent landing at this port 61 a half-atsrved seaman of the Norwegian berk Drot hy the German steamship Catania, which pickod him up off the Florida coast where he had floated on a roughly constructed raft for five days without food or water Illustrated forcibly the powers of endurance of seamen in general. Some years ago Mate Biooks. of the American ship Helle O'Brien, which was burned off the Irish coast, was picked up lying unconscious among a boatload of dead and dying men by Capt. Dunn, of the Lord Line Bteamer Lord Erne, anil brought to Baltimore. He had been ten days with little or no food or wa ter. Robert Scotney, second mate i the English brig Thomas, was found hy an East Inrilanman outward bound in a small boat a living skeleton. He had subsisted 78 days from the time 'he brig was lost on four pounds of meat, four pounds of (lour, six pounds of bread, a scant supply of canned goods and a keg of water. —Baltimore Nt WB. Index Making. A young woman In London has for some years carried on the business of index making. During that period she lias trained In her office forty women Index makers, and she has indexed sueh works as Nansen's "Farthest North," "Science of International Law," 485 volumes of history, and numerous papers and periodicals. Ac coidfng to this enterprising woman, indexing affords a field for women workers that is as yet unoccupied. It Is her belief that the feminine intelli gence Is particularly successful in this line and that she lias found her pupils patient enduring accurate and con scientious. Moreover, women's well known tendency to jump to conclu sions here become n legitimate exer cise as the quick intuition has a great value in successful index-making.—Ex change. A Scientific Rascal. Scientific knowledge has been per verted to the uses of blarkmail bv a medical student of Orantz. Austria, who endeavored to obtain 10,000 flor ins from a rich old lady for threaten ing to open a bottle of assorted deadly bacilli in her room If she refused to "pay up." When arrested bottles stolen from a bacteriological labora tor.v and containing microbes of sev eral diseases were found in his posses sion. Prone to Suicide. Statistics show that the medical pro fession is more prone to suicide than any other. During the last three years the number of suicides occurring among physicians has been respective ly forty-five, forty-nine and forty seven per annum, an average of nearly one to 2,000: or as the death rate among the physicians is about, twen ty-five to 1.000, nearly one-fiftieth of all the deaths in the profession have been suicides. A Simple Camera. A Houlton (Me.) man recently took a very good photograph with a simple PUjtboard box and a dry plate. An aperture was cut in the box over which was pasted a piece of black pa per In which a small hole was made with the point of a pin. The box was then taken to a dark room and plate securely fastened Inside. The plate was exposed for one minute and a half and the result was very satisfac tory. Gambling In France. Gambling In France is said to havt reached such proportions that tin Government has begun to ntudy th< question seriously. It Is estimated that half of the sulfides In Paris are due to losses at the .-aces Women employed ou Japanese tea farms work 12 bonis and are paid 15 cents a day. McMEBAHIN'S When in Doubt What to Buy... FOR AliiajPnsil FOR • Your Father, Your Brother, Your Son or Your Friend Come and See Us. Wo are in line with a huge stock of goods that is complete, appropriate and elegant. In Gift Making nothing is appreciated to such extent as articles of practiban utility and serviceability. PRICES TELL THE STORY. NECKWEAR Our lines of ties are without limit as to shapes, to tilings and designs, an 1 all of popular styles, Including pulls, four-in-hands, tecks and bows. Our prices begin at 10c per tie. Some are worth 15c, others 25c; better qualities at 50c; while for 75c you get a really handsome article. Our present line was specially selected for the holidays. In neckwear we outdistance all com petitors in quantity, quality and low price. MUFFLERS Favorite articles in the gift line are handkerchiefs and mufflers. Without braggadocio wo must say that we can suit you if you can ho suited. Our Handkerchiefs, in silk, linen and even cotton, are all that can bo desired. Prices, 5c up for full size. Silk Mufflers are shown in profusion. 00 to $1.50, according to quality. SWEATERS We have a big line for men and boys. Sweaters in all-wool worsted, a line ar ticle, at sl. Not quite so good, 50c. Something better, $1.50. UMBRELLAS An acceptable present is a Silk Um brella. Wo have them in all varieties of coverings and sticks. Very lino article for SO. Cheaper ones for $1.50, $1 and 75c. Better grades at $2.75 and $3. GLOVES A big line of Gloves in kid, with fur tops, and undressed kids for men and boys. Large assortment of working gloves and mittens in wool and leather as low as 15c. Large varieties in buck skin, calfskin, asbestos, astrakhan and mocha from 15c to $1.50. dUIKTS Wliite or colored, stiff or soft bosom, iauudriod or uelaundried, no matter what kind you desire, we havo them in all qualities and at all prions. Wo sell ur Shirts fur what the, am worth, nut for what we can get fur them. SUM'ENDERS A neat present is a pair of Suspenders. A special lino awaits your Inspection. 10c to 75c. UNDERWEAR If there is anything we pride our -elves oil it is our uuderwuur. We have I,ho largest nod liuest stuck over shown n town. We can give you a suit of lined, or natural wool, or camel's 'lair or (ilaseiiburg, single or doublu breasted, from 25c to a $1.50 a garment. COLLARS AND CUFFS. We carry i one but the most reliable makes, inclining the famous Lion and Anchor brum 8. HOSIERY Slacks of it heie to select from. We have cotton, woolen, Hecce-llned. fanev casfmero, etc., with double heel and too". 10c to 50c a pair. HOYS' KNEE PANTS. We warrant our Hoys' Kneo I'nnts not to rip. 'lhe quality is m surpassable, price considered. 25c, 50c and 75c a pair. OVERALLS AND COATS We havo the Freelaud make at 40c 50c and 75c. Sweet Orr's celebrated union make, never to rip, for mechanics, railroad men, teamsters, etc., 75c. Sweet Orr's Hants, 81.75 to 84.50 a pair. Union make guarantee gben to each purchaser. HEADWEAR Our hat department comes to the front with the season's best offerings. 1 he stock is large'- than ever and our prevailing low prices on other goods also hold good hero. You always vet up-to-date styles here. 11l caps we have un excellent articlo at 10c. Men's and boys' caps of heavy all-wool cloth. HOOTS AND SHOES Men's Shoes. 81.20 to 83.50. Hov's Shoes, 81 to 82.50. Youths' Shoes. 75c to $1.25. Felt and Rubber Hoots 81 '*s to 82.75. Rubbers, 40c to 80c, according to quality desired. Mining Shoes.—The satisfactory re sults given by the Mining Shoes we sell are worth columns of space in the best advertising mediums. They are adver tising themselves so well hy their excel lent service to purchasers that nothing more need bo said in their praise. MfIBIMIN'S
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers